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h e_u/s of thejya tci ima n i two dollars in advance,and two dollars and fifty cents h-m end of the year â– no subscription received tor a less time than one year mn paid for in i ivanee â– no subscription discontinued but at the option ot int hd'uurs until all arrearages are paid terms of advertising . . â– 0 te dollar per square for th â€¢ lir.st insertion and twentj p(-r;^;;:lan_^x - ;';-;. he made to those f t-ri^-x 'â€¢>" continued until forbid and | a-',r.'..-'i i.'-rzcl'-'rdin^.y unless ordered tor a certain nuin ____.' of tin*ea w i ,' lettera addressed to the editors must come pott . h to ens ire attention 'â€¢ fitini chamber's journal the last citation i two criminals were executed at ma i v d l 38 for their ferocious and blood miir.iy conduct during the cmeuleoi 1835 i hey perished by the garota or iron col l substituted in spain for the halter and bt only protested their innocence lo the rrv last moment of their lives but sum moned their accusers and judges to ap pear in judgment with them within afew ays before the bar of the great judge l'et the guilt of these unhappy criminals , irasmosl notorious the murders for which , ,. v suffered had been publicly commit i cl and the only wonder was that they bould have escaped their just punish lent for so long a period as 3 years - this bold and pertinacious assertion of ||,' ir innocence by such undoubted crimi nals fills the mind with the most painful | f nutions we cannot but shudder at the infatuation which led them to go before iheir maker with a lie upon their lips und \\> begin to doubt what degree of j ircdir may be due to the last solemn as sertions of many who have died for crimes pro.ed against them by only circumstan tial evidence can itbe possible that in j_m â€¢< arm nnd uilt in the same awful sit t.;ioii with the terrible apparatus of death ( i ii ;â€¢<-â– them an unpitying crowd of fel . w n around with no hope for the fu ii.i t such as may be founded on the i m oi their creator â€” can the con t n stricken criminal and guiltless vic tim of judicial error under these terrible j circumstances feel alike â€” be equally able i io call down upon their judges the swift roiidenmation of the great judge it i . ms incredible that such things should be ; vet i reference to the history of the kist til fords many instances in which this treat problem of our nature remains on word only to be solved on that day when tin secrets of all hearts shall be made known spain was governed 1311 by ferdi nand iv a monarch possessing many ex cellent quo lilies being brave just and generous ; yet he died in the prime of life iunder very singular circumstances aris ing out of a departure from the love of jus tice which he had usually evinced three noblemen were brought before him charg ed with having murdered a fourth ; they strongly protested their innocence and affirmed that if time were given them they could bring proofs of it ; but the king disregarding tlieir entreatics.ordered them tulic thrown from a lofty rock the un fortunate men continued to make the strongest asseverations of innocence de claring that the death of the king with in thirty days from that time would show the truth of iheir statements for that they summoned him to come to judgment with them before the throne of heaven fer dinand was at this lime in perfect health but whether the startling prediction of his victims produced its own fulfilment by affecting his imagination or whether some other malady attacked him history does not determine â€” he died on the last ofthe thirty days and hence obtained the surname of ferdinand the summoned about this period which abounds in circumstances that show the super ion and intellectual darkness of all classes of people in europe the celebrated order of knights templars was abolished this i powerful body half monastic half milita ry had acquired a strength and influence which made tbem hateful to the jealous eyes ofthe sovereigns of europe ; while individually they were feared by the peo ple who suffered from their vices war riors ofthe cross they passed freely into court and camp wherever the nobles of the land were assembled ; they were privileged to display all the pomp and circumstances of war â€” to practice till that was then considered gay gallant and re fined oradapted to win the love of dames of high degree ; while their vows of ce libacy cut them off from all chance of honorable alliance with the objects of their admiration many a noble house had been dishonored by these soldier priests many an humble heart was rob bed â€¢ t once ofthe innocence of its bright est unent and of all in the shape of wealth that rapacity could wring from , those too powerless to resist still though j guilty of ambition and profligacy â€” the vi ces of the camp though convicted of av arice and luxury â€” the sins ofthe cloister these wrought not their downfall ; their ealth as a body was immense and greater than their political power ; so pope clement v then at avigon and philip the fair of france needy prelate and avaricious king caused all the knights templars within their dominions to be seized on the same day and thrown into secure dungeons jaques de molay he grand master of the order and sever al of the best and bravest among them were accused of sorcery : and other dark lines against the laws of god and man vvhieh admitted not of proof and could nly be met by solemn denial ; some of them in the agonies of the torture to i^'hich they were subjected confessed to possible enormities and were thereup on condemned to die aot so jacques de molay ; he appears to have possessed qualities both physical atld mental that might " give the world assurance of a man mingling the mar y*s faith with the warrior's pride he ne the carolina watchman bruner & james , " > *' keep a check upon all olb editors df proprietors \ s saf ( new series ____ bjÂ»gÂ»ta | number 3i 0f v0lvme , -â€” ______ i salisbury n c august 10 1844 ver qualified under the severest torture but strongly protested not only his own innocence but that of his order even at the last liery ordeal of fagot and stake before the cathedral of notre dame at paris he appeared with unshaken sereni ty his deportment was lull of majesty for he had long been the equal companion of princes and of calm dignity for he was conscious of innocence ; and he had with al a christian faith whose fervor could not be chilled even in the hour of death humbly admitting that he was guilty of the faults of our common nature he de nied the crimes imputed to him and com mit ling his spirit to his maker he sum moned clement and phillip to appear with him in judgment within a year they : both outlived the period though phillip died so soon after as to occasion some doubt in the minds of the believers in the marvellous whether his sudden death was not a fulfilment of the grand master's prediction charles de contault baron de biron was the friend of henry iv of france be | fore that monarch came to the throne and 1 he continued to be his firm adherent for i some time afterwards disappointed,how ever in some project of ambition he ca j ' balled against his master and being be ! t raved by his own valet was committed to the bastile henry was much attach j ed to this brave chevalier and intreated ; him to acknowledge his fault and be for j given ; but either biron was innocent and ; liis valet a traitor or he continued to hope that that person would not ultimately cri 1 j minate him and proudly refused to make ! '. any concession when put upon his trial : he was found guilty ; but he still trusted | to henry's favor for a pardon : thi king l however was not less offended by his ob duracy than by his treason and signed the j warrant for his execution nothing could i exceed the surprise and despair of biron when he was informed that he was to die on the following day ; he broke out into vehement protestations of innocence up braided the king with ingratitude and cruelty and defied and denounced his ac cusers and judges accusing the chancel lor who had presided at his trial of unfair dealing and summoning him to appear in judgment with him within the year the chancellor thrice armed in the conscious ness of his own uprightness did not die but lived five years longer than biron â€” until 1017 the portuguese in 1740 threw off the yoke of spain and nominated john duke of braganza to the throne at his death he left two sons alphonzo and pedro and a daughter catharine who became the unhappy wife of our second charles â€” alphonzo who was a prince of mean in tellect married a princess of nemours ; j she had a good dowry a handsome per j | son considerable talents and few virtues and they succeeded to the throne don pedro the younger brother of alphonzo was every way his superior ; and the shrewd intriguing unscrupulous princess : of nemours soon contrived that her hus band's imbecility should be so apparent as to justify his removal from the throne to make room for don pedro her own divorce then followed and she artfully de manded back her dowry well knowing that it was irrevocably squandered ; but as ber real object was to become the wife ' of don pedro she managed to be solicited to marry him and so re-assume the name and rank of queen having carried this point the guilty pair thought it necessary for their own security to have the depos ' ed king and divorced husband closely con lined : he submitted without complaint and with only a momentary ebullition of anger on hearing that his brother had married his wife for fifteen years he re mained a melancholy captive in the cas tle of cintra the beauties of whose glo rious eden ' he was not suffered to enjoy when on the point of death he said i am going but the queen will soon fol low me to answer before god's awful fri ' bunal for the evils she has heaped upon 1 my head she died a few months after him in 1083 having been more miserable in the gratification of her passions than her victim could have been in his solitary prison the last and most remarkable of these citations is connected with the history of the reigning family of this country ; and its details are perhaps more touching and romantic than any that have preceded it george the electoral prince of hanover who afterwards ascended the throne of great britain was married early in life to sophia dorothea princess of halle a young lady of great personal beauty and accomplishments she was the only child of her parents and had been reared with much tenderness so that she carried to the court of the elector that unchecked gaiety of heart which so often leads in nocent and inexperienced females first in to imprudence and then into error she allowed herself soon after her arrival to make some piquant remarks upon the rather coarse and inelegant ladies whom her father-in-law after the custom of the small german sovereigns kept openly at his court ; and thereby she created ene mies who were ever on the watch to in jure and annoy her her own conduct was irreproachable until in an evil hour there came to hanover the young count coningsmark a swedish nobleman of an ancient and honorable family who was high in favor at the court of stockholm the count fascinated by the manners of . the princess whose husband was absent â– with her father's army paid her the most i flattering attentions which she carelessly i but it is believed innocently admitted â€” this afforded the elector an opportunity of accomplishing her ruin a trap was laid for her which had the effect of bringing coningsmark to the neighborhood of her â– apartments at an improper hour the unfortunate swede was never more seen , in life and sophia being arrested was ' conveyed without loss of time and with the concurrence of her deceived husband | , to the castle of ahlon on the banks of the river ahlon where she remained in close j confinement thirty-two years it is not to be supposed that this incar ceration of a young and beautiful woman â€” the wife of a powerful monarch â€” for george in time became king of great bri ' tain â€” could be an unimportant secret ; their son the prince of wales who was never on very good terms with his father was anxious to see her and twice at the risk of his life swam his horse across the river that surrounded the castle where she was confined there was something very touching in this filial devotion to a molher whom he could scarcely remember to have seen and who was accused of such grave j offences ; but the heart of the old german \ baron who kept the castle was made of such stern stuff as to be proof against all ; fine emotions and the young prince could not obtain an interview with his mother j there was no evidence against her that could justify a divorce ; and on one occa j sion her husband made overtures to her j for a reconciliation ; but she proudly re ! plied if what i am accused of be true i j a:n unworthy of him ; if the accusation j be false he is unworthy of me ; i will not i accept his offer immediately before her j death she wrote a letter to him contain i ing an affirmation of her innocence a re | proach for his injustice and a citation to i appear within a year and a day at the j divine tribunal for judgment this letter | she confided to an intimate friend with a ! solemn charge to see it delivered to the j king's own hand ; but as this was an un j dcrtaking of a delicate if not a danger j ous nature some months passed by with 1 out its being conveyed to him at length j his visit to his electoral dominions seemed j to present the desired opportunity and j when he was on his way to hanover a ; messenger met him and delivered the â– packet to him in his coach suppos ; ing that it came from hanover he opened ; it directly ; but its contents and the fatal citation with which it ended had such an effect on him that he fell into convulsions : which brought on appoplexy and death | he expired at the palace of his brother | the bishopof osnaburgh.just sevenmonths after his unfortunate wife george ii their son always believed in his mother's innocence and had she sur vived his father he would have restored her to rank as queen dowager â€” soon af ter his accession he visited his electoral dominions and caused some alterations to , be made in the palace on taking up the floor of his mother's dressing-room the re ; mains of count coningsmark were dis covered it is probable that the unfortu ; nate man was seized and strangled at the j moment of his arrest and that his body was placed under the boards to prevent discovery the affair was hushed up for ; george was careful of his mother's char , acter ; besides which prudential motives , would lead him to desire strict secrecy on . i this subject his frequent altercations with his father in conjunction with the : stigma thrown upon his mother had al ! ready given occasion to severe sarcasm and some ribaldry on the part of the ja : cobitcs and this discovery was not calcu lated to ailence unwelcome insinuations ! about his parentage \ sophia's story remains on the page of history a melancholy example of the mis eries that may result from the neglect of those minor morals so importantto woman that she was essentially innocent there is little room to doubt but if she had also been duly scrupulous to main tain those appearances of purity which are necessary to the perfection of woman's . moral status her whole destiny might have been bright instead of dark ; her talents and beauty instead of being wast ed in a prison might have adorned a pal i ace and added lustre to a crown such is a brief sketch of some of the most famous citations recorded in history there is matter in them for serious con sideration not as encouraging a supersti tious belief in marvels but as showing the influence of the mind upon the body ; a subject of such importance that the writer gladly leaves it to abler hands the new york republic a very ably con ducted paper which has heretofore been neutral in politics has raised the whig banner at the close of an article announcing the change the editor says : from this time henceforward then this journal will give a steady zealous and honest support to the democratic whig party and use its best endeavors to promote the election of henrv clay whose principles claim the confi dence of the people and whose services entitle him to this highest of all earthly rewards a good toast one of the boston greys at baltimore gave a good toast â€” " the fifty-six signers of the declaration of independence â€” i ; the heaviest fifty-six in the world â€” all europe i could not lift it !" â– ^ ____Â»____-_â– _Â»-___â€” from the wetumpka whig supreme court of the u states the people of the united states 1 vs \ james k polk alias little jemmy j the trial of this case commenced on the first day of june last and will probably occupy the attention of the court until november next â€” the law allowing the jury ofthe sovereign peo ple before whom he is to be tried until that time to make up a xerdict the defendant was ar raigned on the day above mentioned charged with being a â– liar â€” a " coward a " pol troon an inflated toad a " dema gogue a posthumous b ntlixg of tennes ncssee locofocoism and the descendant of a tory inheriting all the anti-republican princi ples of his grandsire it being shown to the satisfaction ofthe court that the defendant had not vet arrived to the age of discretion the lo cofoco party as his proehcin ami was permit ted to conduct tbe defence for him the ap pearance of his " next friend " as he arose to plead was certainly unique he had on a free trade british red coat â€” tariff breeches of true blue â€” a texas annexation coat half white and half black â€” sub-treasury alias seven league boots â€” an internal improvement hat â€” a repudi ating cravat and waistcoat said to have been bequeathed to him by governor dorr when he was sentenced to hard labor for life in the rhode island penitentiary he appeared en tirely unconscious of his grotesque appearance and to the usual question answered " not mal ty with an air of offended dignity that always characterises a hardened rogue the first witness called to the stand was winter vv payne of alabama his official station as member of congress entitled him to be considered as a gentleman of strict veracity and he consequently was not sworn question by the counsel for the prosecution do you know the accused ? answer i do i have known him intimate ly for years q are you in any way related to him a only politically we are both members ofthe locofoco party and support the principles of that harmonious and interesting brotherhood q you have heard the indictment read â€” has the defendant ever been guilty to your knowl edge of any of the charges therein specified ? a i do not now remember q did you not in january last write and publish an article in the washington globe in i which you denounced him as a coward 1 a i did q upon what did you found that charge ? a upon the fact that he permitted mr wise to pull him rudely by the arm and hiss in his ear 0^7 you are the contemptible tool of a petty tyrant â€” i mean that as an insult â€” pocket it cq â€” and did not resent it q did you not in said letter contemptuously term him the " posthumous bantling of ten nessee democracy and compare him to a toad " that his injudicious friends wer trying to put off into the size of an ox ? a i did ; q did you not for these and various other reasons denounce him as totally unfit to be placed upon the ticket as a candidate for vice president ? â€” did you not say that his name would add no strength to any ticket ? â€” did you not ridicule the idea ol attempting to force such a man upon the people of tennessee who had twice repudiated him as their governor ? â€” in short sir did you not say that with his name upon the ticket the democrats could never carry that state ? a i did â€” and such then was my candid opin ion q are you still ofthe same opinion a i am not â€” or at least i do not now de clare it q what reasons have you for changing your opinion ? a col polk is now the candidate of our par tv for the presidency ' q true but does that fact make any thing false that four months ago was true ? a i cannot say that it would ; but i would | thank the marshal for a drink of water circum 1 stances alter cases and it would be treason a gainst the party to say any thing against its ; nominee q i understand you to say then that you now | take back all that you said previous to the nom ination and recommend col polk for the presi â€¢ deney ? a i act in accordance with the " establish ed usao.es ofthe party q what are we to understand by that ? a that we go for the nominee right or ! wrong q has your party no principles then by which they are governed . a yes sir our motto is principles not men but then our avowed " principles " and the established usages ofthe party are ve ry different matters one is for show the other for " use you can stand aside sir ~~~ the hon bailie peyton will take the stand q are you acquainted with the accused ? a lam havelivedhisneighbormanyyears q do you know any thing of his personal courage ? a i was in washington city when the af j fair took place between himself and mr wise ; as described by the witness last examined ; and it was notorious that he was personally insulted almost every day ofthe session without resent ing it q what said the brave and gallant sons of tennessee to this ? a they turned from him in contempt and when he next canvassed hisdistrictforcongress he found it necessary to hush that matter up and for that purpose he read at a large gather . ing oi the people at shelbyville a letter written by^gen jackson declaring that he was no cow ; ard but behaved bravely and prudently in the : affair with wise q did this satisfy the people ? a it did for a time but it coming to the ears ; ofthe old general he came out it the nashville ! union and declared " by the eternal " he nev i er wrote any such letter to col polk or anyone i else q this then subjected him to the charge of alsehood ? a it did and one which he has never been ible to relieve himself from q do you know of any other instance in vhich he could be reasonably charged with alsehood ? a i do : in 1.36 he unequivocally pledged limself to the support of the hon hugh l ivhite for the presidency yet without cause r reason he abruptly broke that pledge and icrsecuted that good old man to his grave q you sav vou have lived some years neigh or to col polk ; can you tell us how he came y his title of colonel . a i can't ; it was an honorary title conferred n him as nominal aid to one of our governors q do vou know of his ever having military ommand of anv body of men or of his having ver fought any battles ? a he has never had command of any body if men and i hue never heard of his lighting int one battle and that was with his brother at columbia who gave him a most unfiaternal logging with a " young hickory from which ie takes his present title q is it generally understood that he thus de ived his title ol " young hickory ?" a i think it is not it is supposed by many hat he is really a sprout or " sucker that has prung up by the decayed body ofthe old tree q what has been the general character and onduet of the accused in the official stations hat he has heretofore occupied . a as speaker ofthe house of representa ivesj which office was given him to mortify john bell whom gen jackson hated he was noto rious for packing committees and so unscrupu lously partial and servile were his decisions to party favorites that the honest men of his own party lost confidence in him and on an impor tant occasion the house suspended the rule and took the appointing ol a committee into its own hands at the close ofthe session the custom arv unanimous vote of thanks to the speaker was withheld from him and after considerable debate in which gen crabb then a member from alabama gave him several pokes it was passed by a strictly party vote q what was his conduct as governor of tennessee . a it was so undignified and unbecoming his high station that the people of that state repudi ated him and his acts nor has he ever since held office at their hands although he has labored long and diligently fur it on one occasion his conduct was made the subject of presentment by the grand jurv of sevier county who direct ly charged him with mal-practice in office and a culpable neglect of public duty q what was the general opinion ofthe con duct of mr wise when he insultingly told col polk in the capitol that he was the " contemp tible tool of a petty tyrant ?" a there were many who thought him in solently bold but i doubt if there was a member of the house who did not believe every word of it to lie strictly true q mr pevton it is made a part of the de j fence ofthe accused that he is a descendant of the patriots ofthe revolution and great efforts â€¢ have been made to bias the minds ofthe jury in his favor on that account will you state to the court and jury what you know of his ancestry and their revolutionary services ? i would not have introduced testimony on this point had it not been put in issue by the defendant himself as i hold that a man should not be responsible only for his own acts a i have an accurate historical knowledge of the whole polk family the ancestors of the accused except ezekiel polk were all whigs and patriots in the revolution and all their descendants are whigs and patriots xow ezekiel polk the grandfather of james k polk the accused was a tory but took no active part in the war as his personal courage was said to be ofthe same stamp of that of his grand son ; but he loitered around wilh british emis saries or staid at home under a protection from lord cornwallis q are you sure that such was the fact ? a if the annal of the past be correct and the testimony of many living witnesses can he relied on no person can doubt the truth of it colonel polk will not d.-ny that he is the grand son of ezekiel polk and no one pretends to de nv that ezekiel polk was a tory of the revo lution q i remarked that no one should be held re sponsible tor the acts or opinions of his ances tors ; besides there are some who do not regard the badge ot toryism as any disgrace mr in ersoll of pennsylvania a leading lck.of.co friend ofthe act used says that if he had been a man in the times of the revolution he would have been a tory also do you know of any acts ofthe accused that savor of the principles of his grandfather ? a i do and with the permission ofthe court i will read a few of them from the published volumes ofthe congressional debates : march 13,15 on the passage of the bill for the relief of surviving officers in the revo lutionary war mr polk voted in the negative cog deb vol 4 part 2 page 1gt0 subsequently on a bill to pay certain militia c he voted in the affirmative march is 1830 he voted against the revolu tionary pension bill same vol 6 part 1 p 629 * march 29 " mr polk spoke some time a gainst the bill and voted against it same p 635 february it 1831 he voted asainst the bill for the relief of revolutionary soldiers same part 5 p 730 mav 2 1 532 he voted against the revolution ary pension bill same vol _. part 2 p 2713 quite sufficient â€” you can stand aside general crabb will take the stand if the court please i shall require this witness to be sworn i think his statement under oath wou_d be more satisfactory to both parties bv the court : we think this distinction between witnesses rather invidious and should he dispensed with ; let the gentleman make his statement and it mav go to the jury for what it is worth q gen crabb in what relationship ociah g-^â€”t â€” â€” â€” g political or otherwise do you now stand to tho accused ? a i am his political friend and ardent sup porter fbr the presidency q were you not once a member of the whig party ? a i was or rather i professed to be and vo ted with that party so long as they retained tho ascendancy in my district and gave me office ; but i never believed in the principles or meas ures ofthe party q you candidly admit then that you hare for years been playing the hypocrite for the sake of oiiice ? a i am a lawyer sir and know that i am not bound to answer any question that will crim inale myself q did you not as a whig member of con gress ote to take the appointing of a commit tee lrom col pÂ«.lk as speaker on account of his notorious party servility and did you not vote against allowing him the customary com pliment of a vote of thanks at the close of the session . a i cannot testily to anything respecting col polk without criminating myself and be sides i have so recently put on his livery that it does not yet _ t easy upon me and i would prefer to say nothing against my new master lest i lose the anticipated reward of my â€” my â€” please excuse me you can stand aside john c calhoun you will please take tha stand q will you have the goodness to state sir whether or not col polk now on trial was a leading member of the locofoco party when you denounced them all as â€¢â€¢ rogues and royalists and held together as a tarty only by the cohe sive power of public plunder p a he was but i have taken that all back so far as it relates to him since he has mounted mv free trade bobby â€” helped me to breakdown van buren ami his old hunkers and render ed me and mv rivalry5 other essential service in aiding us to bring about a dissolution of tho onion and tiie establishment of my favorite *â€¢ southern confederacy it is true as can lie proved by the " madisonian that he stole from capt tyler the texas pony that i gave him to amuse himself with while i attended to more important matters and john jones says he stole some of capt tyler's thunder also but as he rides the pony so gracefully as quite as much to my satisfaction as the captain could have done i shall not quarrel with him about that but leave him to settle the nutter with mr john jones and captain tyler ter se q it appears then that your attachment to the locofoco party is merely nominal or rather conventional and that you still adhere to your former opinions * a certainly : i have no use for them any further than they ad.Â»pt my views and advocate mv measures i still believe everything i ever said of them as a party and only retract so far as it relates to those who come out and swear allegiance to me and ray chivalry i have given the old hunkers '* a poke in the ribs that they will not soon forget and if i can man age to keep my chivalry ** quiet until my plans are matured i will soon have my south ern confederacy on wheels the old lio_t has retired to his cave blind with age and hit roar no longer alarms roe and if clay lie elect ed president a i expect he will be he will ne ver dare to shake a rope over my head as old hickory did and by the eternal i believe he would have used it too if clay had not help ed me to get out ofthe scrape fi r which i owe him many thanks i am ashamed to acknowl edge it before my chivalry but â€” by the court marshal adjourn the court un til to-morrow trade of tiie united states the new york republic says â€” we are in debted to freeman hunt esq for the report of the secretary ol the treasury on commerce and navigation for the three quarters ending june 30 1843 when according to a late law the new fiscal year terminated the exports of domestic produce as compared with former years present the following result : exports from the united slates 1841 1-42 1843 the sea 2_846;851 2,283 01 2,112,548 " forest 6.264 966 5,518,202 3,112,548 agriculture 16,737 4*>2 16 172 42410,919,601 tobacco 12 7-i tu 9 5 fu 755 4 650,979 cotton 5 1 0 34 1 47,593 46 i 19,1 19.808 otberag'cult'e 103,441 81,470 17Â«;,7Â«4 cotton prints 450,503 385,040 358,415 white 2,324,839 2,287,964 575,049 twist 13,593 37,964 57,31*2 o.her cotton 303,701 250,361 3:sj.774 coin 2,746,486 1,170,743 107,429 other manu's 7,654 030 6,769,157 2.131.176 total 106,3*2.233 .-'â€¢.'.â€¢.â€¢_ 77,793,781 the most remarkable feature is the enormous quantity of cotton given for a little money the quantities exported as compared with former years are as follow _ : sealslmnd 6,337.421 7;254,099 7...1..979 upland 523966.g76 77 iÂ».-j'.'l 7-1.7-3,077 total eh 530,204,100 584.717,0-7 79337406 va 51.33.1 3 w 47.593._64 4-.l_9.8m from this it would m that 262.900.000 pounds more c tton was given in 1-13 than in 1841 and 85,000,000 less money received for it tbe difference an s in a great degree from ihe fact that last year specie was received in in payment and l-ll goods it is never the case that as much moaeycan be had for pro duce as goods hence u difference in the ap parent values the prospect tbe e liter of the troy whig savs : " hardly a da passes but we con verse with int iiigem whigs from every section ofthe union on their way to saratoga or ni agara and thev all tell the same story the south the west the east and the north are allin a blaze of enthusiasm and hundreds on hundreds are coming out daily from the polk party and rallying with energy under the glori ous fla of clay and frelinghuysen the lo cos arc evidently alarmed they already feel in their bones the same symptom which termi nated in such a tremendous attack of the fever and ague in 1s40 the globe tbe madisonian the tyler or gan says : we are not surprised that the honest independent portion ol the democratic party "Â« ,. i â€¢ _. i m Â»_. thev nlace no con disgusted with the g!o!.e 1 tuy )'â€¢*<- fidence in it they despise it jwm : formed bv an eye w it-ess thai at the â– *Â«Â£ convention when th prospectus of tk gums the n**j utter contempt

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h e_u/s of thejya tci ima n i two dollars in advance,and two dollars and fifty cents h-m end of the year â– no subscription received tor a less time than one year mn paid for in i ivanee â– no subscription discontinued but at the option ot int hd'uurs until all arrearages are paid terms of advertising . . â– 0 te dollar per square for th â€¢ lir.st insertion and twentj p(-r;^;;:lan_^x - ;';-;. he made to those f t-ri^-x 'â€¢>" continued until forbid and | a-',r.'..-'i i.'-rzcl'-'rdin^.y unless ordered tor a certain nuin ____.' of tin*ea w i ,' lettera addressed to the editors must come pott . h to ens ire attention 'â€¢ fitini chamber's journal the last citation i two criminals were executed at ma i v d l 38 for their ferocious and blood miir.iy conduct during the cmeuleoi 1835 i hey perished by the garota or iron col l substituted in spain for the halter and bt only protested their innocence lo the rrv last moment of their lives but sum moned their accusers and judges to ap pear in judgment with them within afew ays before the bar of the great judge l'et the guilt of these unhappy criminals , irasmosl notorious the murders for which , ,. v suffered had been publicly commit i cl and the only wonder was that they bould have escaped their just punish lent for so long a period as 3 years - this bold and pertinacious assertion of ||,' ir innocence by such undoubted crimi nals fills the mind with the most painful | f nutions we cannot but shudder at the infatuation which led them to go before iheir maker with a lie upon their lips und \\> begin to doubt what degree of j ircdir may be due to the last solemn as sertions of many who have died for crimes pro.ed against them by only circumstan tial evidence can itbe possible that in j_m â€¢< arm nnd uilt in the same awful sit t.;ioii with the terrible apparatus of death ( i ii ;â€¢ *' keep a check upon all olb editors df proprietors \ s saf ( new series ____ bjÂ»gÂ»ta | number 3i 0f v0lvme , -â€” ______ i salisbury n c august 10 1844 ver qualified under the severest torture but strongly protested not only his own innocence but that of his order even at the last liery ordeal of fagot and stake before the cathedral of notre dame at paris he appeared with unshaken sereni ty his deportment was lull of majesty for he had long been the equal companion of princes and of calm dignity for he was conscious of innocence ; and he had with al a christian faith whose fervor could not be chilled even in the hour of death humbly admitting that he was guilty of the faults of our common nature he de nied the crimes imputed to him and com mit ling his spirit to his maker he sum moned clement and phillip to appear with him in judgment within a year they : both outlived the period though phillip died so soon after as to occasion some doubt in the minds of the believers in the marvellous whether his sudden death was not a fulfilment of the grand master's prediction charles de contault baron de biron was the friend of henry iv of france be | fore that monarch came to the throne and 1 he continued to be his firm adherent for i some time afterwards disappointed,how ever in some project of ambition he ca j ' balled against his master and being be ! t raved by his own valet was committed to the bastile henry was much attach j ed to this brave chevalier and intreated ; him to acknowledge his fault and be for j given ; but either biron was innocent and ; liis valet a traitor or he continued to hope that that person would not ultimately cri 1 j minate him and proudly refused to make ! '. any concession when put upon his trial : he was found guilty ; but he still trusted | to henry's favor for a pardon : thi king l however was not less offended by his ob duracy than by his treason and signed the j warrant for his execution nothing could i exceed the surprise and despair of biron when he was informed that he was to die on the following day ; he broke out into vehement protestations of innocence up braided the king with ingratitude and cruelty and defied and denounced his ac cusers and judges accusing the chancel lor who had presided at his trial of unfair dealing and summoning him to appear in judgment with him within the year the chancellor thrice armed in the conscious ness of his own uprightness did not die but lived five years longer than biron â€” until 1017 the portuguese in 1740 threw off the yoke of spain and nominated john duke of braganza to the throne at his death he left two sons alphonzo and pedro and a daughter catharine who became the unhappy wife of our second charles â€” alphonzo who was a prince of mean in tellect married a princess of nemours ; j she had a good dowry a handsome per j | son considerable talents and few virtues and they succeeded to the throne don pedro the younger brother of alphonzo was every way his superior ; and the shrewd intriguing unscrupulous princess : of nemours soon contrived that her hus band's imbecility should be so apparent as to justify his removal from the throne to make room for don pedro her own divorce then followed and she artfully de manded back her dowry well knowing that it was irrevocably squandered ; but as ber real object was to become the wife ' of don pedro she managed to be solicited to marry him and so re-assume the name and rank of queen having carried this point the guilty pair thought it necessary for their own security to have the depos ' ed king and divorced husband closely con lined : he submitted without complaint and with only a momentary ebullition of anger on hearing that his brother had married his wife for fifteen years he re mained a melancholy captive in the cas tle of cintra the beauties of whose glo rious eden ' he was not suffered to enjoy when on the point of death he said i am going but the queen will soon fol low me to answer before god's awful fri ' bunal for the evils she has heaped upon 1 my head she died a few months after him in 1083 having been more miserable in the gratification of her passions than her victim could have been in his solitary prison the last and most remarkable of these citations is connected with the history of the reigning family of this country ; and its details are perhaps more touching and romantic than any that have preceded it george the electoral prince of hanover who afterwards ascended the throne of great britain was married early in life to sophia dorothea princess of halle a young lady of great personal beauty and accomplishments she was the only child of her parents and had been reared with much tenderness so that she carried to the court of the elector that unchecked gaiety of heart which so often leads in nocent and inexperienced females first in to imprudence and then into error she allowed herself soon after her arrival to make some piquant remarks upon the rather coarse and inelegant ladies whom her father-in-law after the custom of the small german sovereigns kept openly at his court ; and thereby she created ene mies who were ever on the watch to in jure and annoy her her own conduct was irreproachable until in an evil hour there came to hanover the young count coningsmark a swedish nobleman of an ancient and honorable family who was high in favor at the court of stockholm the count fascinated by the manners of . the princess whose husband was absent â– with her father's army paid her the most i flattering attentions which she carelessly i but it is believed innocently admitted â€” this afforded the elector an opportunity of accomplishing her ruin a trap was laid for her which had the effect of bringing coningsmark to the neighborhood of her â– apartments at an improper hour the unfortunate swede was never more seen , in life and sophia being arrested was ' conveyed without loss of time and with the concurrence of her deceived husband | , to the castle of ahlon on the banks of the river ahlon where she remained in close j confinement thirty-two years it is not to be supposed that this incar ceration of a young and beautiful woman â€” the wife of a powerful monarch â€” for george in time became king of great bri ' tain â€” could be an unimportant secret ; their son the prince of wales who was never on very good terms with his father was anxious to see her and twice at the risk of his life swam his horse across the river that surrounded the castle where she was confined there was something very touching in this filial devotion to a molher whom he could scarcely remember to have seen and who was accused of such grave j offences ; but the heart of the old german \ baron who kept the castle was made of such stern stuff as to be proof against all ; fine emotions and the young prince could not obtain an interview with his mother j there was no evidence against her that could justify a divorce ; and on one occa j sion her husband made overtures to her j for a reconciliation ; but she proudly re ! plied if what i am accused of be true i j a:n unworthy of him ; if the accusation j be false he is unworthy of me ; i will not i accept his offer immediately before her j death she wrote a letter to him contain i ing an affirmation of her innocence a re | proach for his injustice and a citation to i appear within a year and a day at the j divine tribunal for judgment this letter | she confided to an intimate friend with a ! solemn charge to see it delivered to the j king's own hand ; but as this was an un j dcrtaking of a delicate if not a danger j ous nature some months passed by with 1 out its being conveyed to him at length j his visit to his electoral dominions seemed j to present the desired opportunity and j when he was on his way to hanover a ; messenger met him and delivered the â– packet to him in his coach suppos ; ing that it came from hanover he opened ; it directly ; but its contents and the fatal citation with which it ended had such an effect on him that he fell into convulsions : which brought on appoplexy and death | he expired at the palace of his brother | the bishopof osnaburgh.just sevenmonths after his unfortunate wife george ii their son always believed in his mother's innocence and had she sur vived his father he would have restored her to rank as queen dowager â€” soon af ter his accession he visited his electoral dominions and caused some alterations to , be made in the palace on taking up the floor of his mother's dressing-room the re ; mains of count coningsmark were dis covered it is probable that the unfortu ; nate man was seized and strangled at the j moment of his arrest and that his body was placed under the boards to prevent discovery the affair was hushed up for ; george was careful of his mother's char , acter ; besides which prudential motives , would lead him to desire strict secrecy on . i this subject his frequent altercations with his father in conjunction with the : stigma thrown upon his mother had al ! ready given occasion to severe sarcasm and some ribaldry on the part of the ja : cobitcs and this discovery was not calcu lated to ailence unwelcome insinuations ! about his parentage \ sophia's story remains on the page of history a melancholy example of the mis eries that may result from the neglect of those minor morals so importantto woman that she was essentially innocent there is little room to doubt but if she had also been duly scrupulous to main tain those appearances of purity which are necessary to the perfection of woman's . moral status her whole destiny might have been bright instead of dark ; her talents and beauty instead of being wast ed in a prison might have adorned a pal i ace and added lustre to a crown such is a brief sketch of some of the most famous citations recorded in history there is matter in them for serious con sideration not as encouraging a supersti tious belief in marvels but as showing the influence of the mind upon the body ; a subject of such importance that the writer gladly leaves it to abler hands the new york republic a very ably con ducted paper which has heretofore been neutral in politics has raised the whig banner at the close of an article announcing the change the editor says : from this time henceforward then this journal will give a steady zealous and honest support to the democratic whig party and use its best endeavors to promote the election of henrv clay whose principles claim the confi dence of the people and whose services entitle him to this highest of all earthly rewards a good toast one of the boston greys at baltimore gave a good toast â€” " the fifty-six signers of the declaration of independence â€” i ; the heaviest fifty-six in the world â€” all europe i could not lift it !" â– ^ ____Â»____-_â– _Â»-___â€” from the wetumpka whig supreme court of the u states the people of the united states 1 vs \ james k polk alias little jemmy j the trial of this case commenced on the first day of june last and will probably occupy the attention of the court until november next â€” the law allowing the jury ofthe sovereign peo ple before whom he is to be tried until that time to make up a xerdict the defendant was ar raigned on the day above mentioned charged with being a â– liar â€” a " coward a " pol troon an inflated toad a " dema gogue a posthumous b ntlixg of tennes ncssee locofocoism and the descendant of a tory inheriting all the anti-republican princi ples of his grandsire it being shown to the satisfaction ofthe court that the defendant had not vet arrived to the age of discretion the lo cofoco party as his proehcin ami was permit ted to conduct tbe defence for him the ap pearance of his " next friend " as he arose to plead was certainly unique he had on a free trade british red coat â€” tariff breeches of true blue â€” a texas annexation coat half white and half black â€” sub-treasury alias seven league boots â€” an internal improvement hat â€” a repudi ating cravat and waistcoat said to have been bequeathed to him by governor dorr when he was sentenced to hard labor for life in the rhode island penitentiary he appeared en tirely unconscious of his grotesque appearance and to the usual question answered " not mal ty with an air of offended dignity that always characterises a hardened rogue the first witness called to the stand was winter vv payne of alabama his official station as member of congress entitled him to be considered as a gentleman of strict veracity and he consequently was not sworn question by the counsel for the prosecution do you know the accused ? answer i do i have known him intimate ly for years q are you in any way related to him a only politically we are both members ofthe locofoco party and support the principles of that harmonious and interesting brotherhood q you have heard the indictment read â€” has the defendant ever been guilty to your knowl edge of any of the charges therein specified ? a i do not now remember q did you not in january last write and publish an article in the washington globe in i which you denounced him as a coward 1 a i did q upon what did you found that charge ? a upon the fact that he permitted mr wise to pull him rudely by the arm and hiss in his ear 0^7 you are the contemptible tool of a petty tyrant â€” i mean that as an insult â€” pocket it cq â€” and did not resent it q did you not in said letter contemptuously term him the " posthumous bantling of ten nessee democracy and compare him to a toad " that his injudicious friends wer trying to put off into the size of an ox ? a i did ; q did you not for these and various other reasons denounce him as totally unfit to be placed upon the ticket as a candidate for vice president ? â€” did you not say that his name would add no strength to any ticket ? â€” did you not ridicule the idea ol attempting to force such a man upon the people of tennessee who had twice repudiated him as their governor ? â€” in short sir did you not say that with his name upon the ticket the democrats could never carry that state ? a i did â€” and such then was my candid opin ion q are you still ofthe same opinion a i am not â€” or at least i do not now de clare it q what reasons have you for changing your opinion ? a col polk is now the candidate of our par tv for the presidency ' q true but does that fact make any thing false that four months ago was true ? a i cannot say that it would ; but i would | thank the marshal for a drink of water circum 1 stances alter cases and it would be treason a gainst the party to say any thing against its ; nominee q i understand you to say then that you now | take back all that you said previous to the nom ination and recommend col polk for the presi â€¢ deney ? a i act in accordance with the " establish ed usao.es ofthe party q what are we to understand by that ? a that we go for the nominee right or ! wrong q has your party no principles then by which they are governed . a yes sir our motto is principles not men but then our avowed " principles " and the established usages ofthe party are ve ry different matters one is for show the other for " use you can stand aside sir ~~~ the hon bailie peyton will take the stand q are you acquainted with the accused ? a lam havelivedhisneighbormanyyears q do you know any thing of his personal courage ? a i was in washington city when the af j fair took place between himself and mr wise ; as described by the witness last examined ; and it was notorious that he was personally insulted almost every day ofthe session without resent ing it q what said the brave and gallant sons of tennessee to this ? a they turned from him in contempt and when he next canvassed hisdistrictforcongress he found it necessary to hush that matter up and for that purpose he read at a large gather . ing oi the people at shelbyville a letter written by^gen jackson declaring that he was no cow ; ard but behaved bravely and prudently in the : affair with wise q did this satisfy the people ? a it did for a time but it coming to the ears ; ofthe old general he came out it the nashville ! union and declared " by the eternal " he nev i er wrote any such letter to col polk or anyone i else q this then subjected him to the charge of alsehood ? a it did and one which he has never been ible to relieve himself from q do you know of any other instance in vhich he could be reasonably charged with alsehood ? a i do : in 1.36 he unequivocally pledged limself to the support of the hon hugh l ivhite for the presidency yet without cause r reason he abruptly broke that pledge and icrsecuted that good old man to his grave q you sav vou have lived some years neigh or to col polk ; can you tell us how he came y his title of colonel . a i can't ; it was an honorary title conferred n him as nominal aid to one of our governors q do vou know of his ever having military ommand of anv body of men or of his having ver fought any battles ? a he has never had command of any body if men and i hue never heard of his lighting int one battle and that was with his brother at columbia who gave him a most unfiaternal logging with a " young hickory from which ie takes his present title q is it generally understood that he thus de ived his title ol " young hickory ?" a i think it is not it is supposed by many hat he is really a sprout or " sucker that has prung up by the decayed body ofthe old tree q what has been the general character and onduet of the accused in the official stations hat he has heretofore occupied . a as speaker ofthe house of representa ivesj which office was given him to mortify john bell whom gen jackson hated he was noto rious for packing committees and so unscrupu lously partial and servile were his decisions to party favorites that the honest men of his own party lost confidence in him and on an impor tant occasion the house suspended the rule and took the appointing ol a committee into its own hands at the close ofthe session the custom arv unanimous vote of thanks to the speaker was withheld from him and after considerable debate in which gen crabb then a member from alabama gave him several pokes it was passed by a strictly party vote q what was his conduct as governor of tennessee . a it was so undignified and unbecoming his high station that the people of that state repudi ated him and his acts nor has he ever since held office at their hands although he has labored long and diligently fur it on one occasion his conduct was made the subject of presentment by the grand jurv of sevier county who direct ly charged him with mal-practice in office and a culpable neglect of public duty q what was the general opinion ofthe con duct of mr wise when he insultingly told col polk in the capitol that he was the " contemp tible tool of a petty tyrant ?" a there were many who thought him in solently bold but i doubt if there was a member of the house who did not believe every word of it to lie strictly true q mr pevton it is made a part of the de j fence ofthe accused that he is a descendant of the patriots ofthe revolution and great efforts â€¢ have been made to bias the minds ofthe jury in his favor on that account will you state to the court and jury what you know of his ancestry and their revolutionary services ? i would not have introduced testimony on this point had it not been put in issue by the defendant himself as i hold that a man should not be responsible only for his own acts a i have an accurate historical knowledge of the whole polk family the ancestors of the accused except ezekiel polk were all whigs and patriots in the revolution and all their descendants are whigs and patriots xow ezekiel polk the grandfather of james k polk the accused was a tory but took no active part in the war as his personal courage was said to be ofthe same stamp of that of his grand son ; but he loitered around wilh british emis saries or staid at home under a protection from lord cornwallis q are you sure that such was the fact ? a if the annal of the past be correct and the testimony of many living witnesses can he relied on no person can doubt the truth of it colonel polk will not d.-ny that he is the grand son of ezekiel polk and no one pretends to de nv that ezekiel polk was a tory of the revo lution q i remarked that no one should be held re sponsible tor the acts or opinions of his ances tors ; besides there are some who do not regard the badge ot toryism as any disgrace mr in ersoll of pennsylvania a leading lck.of.co friend ofthe act used says that if he had been a man in the times of the revolution he would have been a tory also do you know of any acts ofthe accused that savor of the principles of his grandfather ? a i do and with the permission ofthe court i will read a few of them from the published volumes ofthe congressional debates : march 13,15 on the passage of the bill for the relief of surviving officers in the revo lutionary war mr polk voted in the negative cog deb vol 4 part 2 page 1gt0 subsequently on a bill to pay certain militia c he voted in the affirmative march is 1830 he voted against the revolu tionary pension bill same vol 6 part 1 p 629 * march 29 " mr polk spoke some time a gainst the bill and voted against it same p 635 february it 1831 he voted asainst the bill for the relief of revolutionary soldiers same part 5 p 730 mav 2 1 532 he voted against the revolution ary pension bill same vol _. part 2 p 2713 quite sufficient â€” you can stand aside general crabb will take the stand if the court please i shall require this witness to be sworn i think his statement under oath wou_d be more satisfactory to both parties bv the court : we think this distinction between witnesses rather invidious and should he dispensed with ; let the gentleman make his statement and it mav go to the jury for what it is worth q gen crabb in what relationship ociah g-^â€”t â€” â€” â€” g political or otherwise do you now stand to tho accused ? a i am his political friend and ardent sup porter fbr the presidency q were you not once a member of the whig party ? a i was or rather i professed to be and vo ted with that party so long as they retained tho ascendancy in my district and gave me office ; but i never believed in the principles or meas ures ofthe party q you candidly admit then that you hare for years been playing the hypocrite for the sake of oiiice ? a i am a lawyer sir and know that i am not bound to answer any question that will crim inale myself q did you not as a whig member of con gress ote to take the appointing of a commit tee lrom col pÂ«.lk as speaker on account of his notorious party servility and did you not vote against allowing him the customary com pliment of a vote of thanks at the close of the session . a i cannot testily to anything respecting col polk without criminating myself and be sides i have so recently put on his livery that it does not yet _ t easy upon me and i would prefer to say nothing against my new master lest i lose the anticipated reward of my â€” my â€” please excuse me you can stand aside john c calhoun you will please take tha stand q will you have the goodness to state sir whether or not col polk now on trial was a leading member of the locofoco party when you denounced them all as â€¢â€¢ rogues and royalists and held together as a tarty only by the cohe sive power of public plunder p a he was but i have taken that all back so far as it relates to him since he has mounted mv free trade bobby â€” helped me to breakdown van buren ami his old hunkers and render ed me and mv rivalry5 other essential service in aiding us to bring about a dissolution of tho onion and tiie establishment of my favorite *â€¢ southern confederacy it is true as can lie proved by the " madisonian that he stole from capt tyler the texas pony that i gave him to amuse himself with while i attended to more important matters and john jones says he stole some of capt tyler's thunder also but as he rides the pony so gracefully as quite as much to my satisfaction as the captain could have done i shall not quarrel with him about that but leave him to settle the nutter with mr john jones and captain tyler ter se q it appears then that your attachment to the locofoco party is merely nominal or rather conventional and that you still adhere to your former opinions * a certainly : i have no use for them any further than they ad.Â»pt my views and advocate mv measures i still believe everything i ever said of them as a party and only retract so far as it relates to those who come out and swear allegiance to me and ray chivalry i have given the old hunkers '* a poke in the ribs that they will not soon forget and if i can man age to keep my chivalry ** quiet until my plans are matured i will soon have my south ern confederacy on wheels the old lio_t has retired to his cave blind with age and hit roar no longer alarms roe and if clay lie elect ed president a i expect he will be he will ne ver dare to shake a rope over my head as old hickory did and by the eternal i believe he would have used it too if clay had not help ed me to get out ofthe scrape fi r which i owe him many thanks i am ashamed to acknowl edge it before my chivalry but â€” by the court marshal adjourn the court un til to-morrow trade of tiie united states the new york republic says â€” we are in debted to freeman hunt esq for the report of the secretary ol the treasury on commerce and navigation for the three quarters ending june 30 1843 when according to a late law the new fiscal year terminated the exports of domestic produce as compared with former years present the following result : exports from the united slates 1841 1-42 1843 the sea 2_846;851 2,283 01 2,112,548 " forest 6.264 966 5,518,202 3,112,548 agriculture 16,737 4*>2 16 172 42410,919,601 tobacco 12 7-i tu 9 5 fu 755 4 650,979 cotton 5 1 0 34 1 47,593 46 i 19,1 19.808 otberag'cult'e 103,441 81,470 17Â«;,7Â«4 cotton prints 450,503 385,040 358,415 white 2,324,839 2,287,964 575,049 twist 13,593 37,964 57,31*2 o.her cotton 303,701 250,361 3:sj.774 coin 2,746,486 1,170,743 107,429 other manu's 7,654 030 6,769,157 2.131.176 total 106,3*2.233 .-'â€¢.'.â€¢.â€¢_ 77,793,781 the most remarkable feature is the enormous quantity of cotton given for a little money the quantities exported as compared with former years are as follow _ : sealslmnd 6,337.421 7;254,099 7...1..979 upland 523966.g76 77 iÂ».-j'.'l 7-1.7-3,077 total eh 530,204,100 584.717,0-7 79337406 va 51.33.1 3 w 47.593._64 4-.l_9.8m from this it would m that 262.900.000 pounds more c tton was given in 1-13 than in 1841 and 85,000,000 less money received for it tbe difference an s in a great degree from ihe fact that last year specie was received in in payment and l-ll goods it is never the case that as much moaeycan be had for pro duce as goods hence u difference in the ap parent values the prospect tbe e liter of the troy whig savs : " hardly a da passes but we con verse with int iiigem whigs from every section ofthe union on their way to saratoga or ni agara and thev all tell the same story the south the west the east and the north are allin a blaze of enthusiasm and hundreds on hundreds are coming out daily from the polk party and rallying with energy under the glori ous fla of clay and frelinghuysen the lo cos arc evidently alarmed they already feel in their bones the same symptom which termi nated in such a tremendous attack of the fever and ague in 1s40 the globe tbe madisonian the tyler or gan says : we are not surprised that the honest independent portion ol the democratic party "Â« ,. i â€¢ _. i m Â»_. thev nlace no con disgusted with the g!o!.e 1 tuy )'â€¢*